Discrete defect plasticity and implications for dissipation
Alan Needleman

TL;DR
This paper explores how discrete defects like dislocations and shear transformation zones influence plastic deformation, emphasizing the importance of defect dissipation, its evolution, and the conditions under which the second law of thermodynamics may be locally violated.
Contribution
It introduces explicit kinetic relations for defect dissipation, analyzes their implications for size effects and stability, and discusses the potential for negative dissipation rates in discrete defect models.
Findings
Discrete defect dissipation affects friction, fatigue, and thermal softening.
Negative dissipation rates can occur temporarily without system instability.
Explicit kinetic relations reveal conditions leading to negative dissipation.
Abstract
The focus is on discrete defects that can be modeled by continuum mechanics, but where the discreteness of the carriers of plastic deformation plays a significant role. The formulations are restricted to small deformation kinematics and the defects considered, dislocations and discrete shear transformation zones (STZs), are described by their linear elastic fields. In discrete defect plasticity both the stress-strain response and the partitioning between defect energy storage and defect dissipation are outcomes of an initial/boundary value problem solution. Discrete dislocation plasticity modeling results are reviewed that illustrate the implications of defect dissipation evolution for friction, fatigue crack growth and thermal softening. Examples are also given of consequences of three modes of the evolution of discrete defects for size dependence and dissipation in constrained shear.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrostructure and mechanical properties · High-Velocity Impact and Material Behavior · Metallurgy and Material Forming
